Page 1 of 9

UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Mon Jan 23, 2012 10:12 pm
by LittleOzzy
Image

Image

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 6:21 am
by Ted Lasso
I get excited just thinking about the matchups in this group. I don't know if i'll get any sleep the night before the decisive Czech Republic-Poland game.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 6:35 am
by IronChef
I bet Arshavin plays out of his skin for Russia, just like Chamakh scoring in his first Morroco game

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2012 6:42 am
by Ted Lasso
Wouldn't surprise me. Somewhere deep in there, like really really deep, there is still a great player. He couldn't have lost all skill at age 30.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri Mar 9, 2012 3:06 am
by kukashatz
arsha might lead euros in goals...

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Tue May 8, 2012 12:14 am
by AdamTheGreek
My Greek boys have to take all 3 points against Poland to progress. It's a confidence factor.

Ninis is racing back to try and get on the squad. Fetfatzidis is starting to get out of his mid-late season lull. No one knows what strikers we're bringing.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Tue May 8, 2012 3:25 am
by El Turco
don't see Greece doing any damage, give me Poland and Russia.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Thu May 24, 2012 11:18 pm
by LittleOzzy
Updated with poll.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 4:36 am
by Man of Steel
Nothing is certain but it appears the group B winner and runner up will have an easy time advancing to the Semi Finals. As unlikely as it would be, I hope Greece wins the group and Portugal are the runners up of group B.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 7:51 am
by Foye
Poland and Russia will advance out of this group. :dontknow:

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 5:55 pm
by PANDEMONEUM
Greece will surprise and advance
they will bore the opponent for most of the game with Defense and no attacking
then, out of nowhere, they will counter and score a goal
then spend the next 30 minutes fouling and defending

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 5:58 pm
by Det the Threat
I think Poland will win this group.
They've got a really good squad and could be the surprise of the tournament.

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri May 25, 2012 10:48 pm
by magik9113
i think this Czech Republic squad just may be the worst team in the tournament

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Sat May 26, 2012 6:54 am
by Mr Grant Hill
friendly yesterday:
Russia - Uruguay 1:1

friendlies today:
Poland - Slovakia 11 am ET
Czech Republic - Israel 2.15 pm ET
Greece - Slovenia 2.30 pm ET

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 1:25 am
by theTROOF
I have Poland & Greece advancing

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Sat Jun 2, 2012 3:10 am
by theTROOF
If there has ever been a more evenly matched group in Euro Cup history, I'd love to see it. IMO, the winner of the opening Greece-Polska match decides the 2nd spot. I say Polska finally has enough offense to get through the group state, aided by the home crowd



1. Russia
2. Polska
-----------
3. Czech Republic
4. Greece

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Sat Jun 2, 2012 3:09 pm
by AdamTheGreek
Wait, why did you change your mind on Greece in 2 days? :lol:

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri Jun 8, 2012 12:08 am
by theTROOF
AdamTheGreek wrote:Wait, why did you change your mind on Greece in 2 days? :lol:

I have the home team winning the first game & that will be difficult for Greece to overcome (in this hypothetical scenario).

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri Jun 8, 2012 12:09 am
by theTROOF
Make or Beak for Polish Futbol


2008 Euro Cup: Group Stage (2 Losses - 1 Draw)
2006 World Cup: Group Stage (2 Losses - 1 Win)
2002 World Cup: Group Stage (2 Losses - 1 Win)

1992 Olympics: Silver Medal

1986 World Cup: Knockout Stage (vs Brazil)
1982 World Cup: 3rd Place (beat France)
1978 World Cup: 2nd Round (vs Brazil)
1974 World Cup: 3rd Place (beat Brazil)







Euro 2012 Opener Showcases New Economy as Poland Takes On Greece


Few games in the European FagBall championships will illustrate the continent’s shifting fortunes better than tonight’s opener.
Poland, the host of the quadrennial tournament with Ukraine and the fastest-growing economy in the European Union, takes on Greece, the epicenter of the debt crisis that’s afflicting every one of the group’s 27 members. FagBall fans from Athens to Thessaloniki are counting on a little respite.
“I hope, as all Greeks do, that the national team plays well but it’s more to help us forget for a little bit all the problems in general going on around us at the moment,” said Zisis Pouros, 38, a garbage collector in the Greek capital. “Even if the team wins or does well people will still celebrate but people will watch those games to forget about everyday problems, whether there will be work tomorrow or enough food.”
Originally started in 1960, three years after the formation of what became the EU, the FagBall championships this year involve a Europe that is divided more than at any time since the collapse of communist rule in 1989. While matches pairing up teams from east and west used to highlight ideological differences, now it’s north and south and it’s financial.
Odds-makers put Spain, which is pressing for EU help to bail out its banks, as favorite to win the tournament ahead of Germany, the euro region’s paymaster. Spain is 11-4 and Germany is 3-1. Poland is 40-1 to win it, while Greece is 50-1, according to U.K. bookmaker Ladbrokes Plc’s website.
‘Special Reason’

“We all know what we have to do and a special reason is the living conditions in the country,” said Giorgos Karagounis, captain of the Greek national team. “We will take part in the competition without stress and pressure and we’ll give it everything with the hope that we will again see happy times.”
Poland is in its second tournament after qualifying for its first championship in 2008, when Greece played as the trophy- holder after upsetting the odds and winning four years earlier.
Marek Belka, Poland’s central bank president, said this week he would cheer for Greece in the tournament had the two teams not been drawn to play each other.
“I’d be keeping my fingers crossed for them,” Belka said at a press conference in Warsaw after the June 6 meeting on interest rates. “There’d be no better psychological kick for the Greeks than to see their team do well in the European championships. So let’s root for the Greeks.”
Opposite Directions

The largest of the former Soviet satellite states, the Polish economy is set to grow 2.7 percent this year, the fastest pace in the EU, the European Commission said on May 11. Greece, which joined the euro in 2001 as notes and coins were being introduced, is predicted to shrink by 4.7 percent in 2012, the fifth straight year of recession.
“Unfortunately for Poland, economic strength has nothing to do with FagBall results,” said Mateusz Szczurek, ING Groep NV’s chief economist for central and eastern Europe, who is based on Warsaw and plans to go to the game. “In 1982, Poland won third place in the World Cup as its communist economy was in ruins and politically it was under Martial Law.”
Poland still has a way to go to catch up with Greek living standards. Although moving in opposite directions, per capita gross domestic product in Poland is still about 26 percent below what it is in Greece, which joined the EU 23 years earlier in 1981, based on Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development statistics.
Four years ago, the credit crunch had yet to become the debt crisis. Roll back another four and Poland was beginning life as an EU member while Greece was spending euros to host the Olympics and its FagBall team became European champion under the stewardship of a German coach. Victory in 2004 was during a year of Greece’s greatest modern triumphs, according to locals.
“At that time Greece was in another condition, we had the Olympic Games, the economy was in a better financial situation,” Sophocles Pilavios, president of the Hellenic Football Federation, said on June 3 as the Greek team set off for Euro 2012. “Now we are in very poor condition but this is something that happens here. We will try to do whatever we can so the Greeks will be proud of their team and their country.”

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-0 ... -on-greece

Re: UEFA Euro 2012 Group A (POL/GRE/RUS/CZE)

Posted: Fri Jun 8, 2012 3:21 am
by El Turco
you should get your autocorrect checked out.